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10 answers

Depends on location & situation. I'm in Calif.
If you are breaking it because of habitability issues, you're off the hook. Teh prem is leased w/ a warentee of habitability.
If you decided you want to live somewhere else & just don't have a good reason... you're stuck. That's what leases are for.... give both sides stability. I don't know where you can give several months notice.... no in Calif!
You can not sub-lease without the landlord's conscent. At all!

Being real.... a lease protects the tenant, not the landlord. I NEVER lease! I have everyone on a month-2-month! I am collectable, few tenants really are.

2006-08-30 16:36:31 · answer #1 · answered by Fulltime in my RV (I wish) 3 · 0 0

It depends on the terms of your lease and the reason for wanting to break the lease. For instance, I had a lease that would allow you to break it if you were in the military and got reassigned, with some notice to the landlord of course.

Usually though you must pay the rent for the remainder of the lease even if you do not live there, you forfeit your security deposit and it also goes on your credit record.

Some places allow you to sublet; find someone to live there that will pay the rent, maybe this would be an option for you. They may have qualifications as to who you want to sublet to.

Hope this helps :)

2006-08-30 15:11:57 · answer #2 · answered by supersuzym 2 · 0 0

In MA, the landlord is obligated to try to re-rent the apartment (at the existing tenant's cost.) The new tenant must meet the same criteria that the first tenant was held to. They must also be required to pay the same rent. If the landlord finds someone who meets those 2 requirements, then the first tenant (lease breaker) is off the hook. Otherwise, the first tenant is required to fulfill the terms of the lease (pay for the remaining months on the lease.)

2006-08-30 15:09:53 · answer #3 · answered by clueless 3 · 0 0

You can also sign the lease over to someone else with a notarized document to the landlord

2006-08-30 16:04:32 · answer #4 · answered by candance1012 1 · 0 0

you'll owe them the $a million,six hundred... Plus they could sue you, in accordance to the position you stay you've gotten to pay courtroom value. Then they'll placed it in collections. think ofyou've got to pay the collections expenses. which will accrue at an excellent cost. Plus it is going to damage your credit status. WORST of ALL; they'd be in a position to carry you to blame for all employ till they locate yet another tenant! The stuff the did not do to fix the position hurts ethically, yet because you probably did not carry it to the housing authority, and they were contained in the approach or "attempting" to fix it. you do not extremely have ammo hostile to them. Sorry for the undesirable success. brilliant guess? search for advice from with the apt. manager. tell them you're very sorry for the surprising flow. That once think ofyou've got given them any extra observe you'll have. and also you want to pay your debt once available. In good faith pay them as a lot as you could precise then a minimum of $100-2 hundred. (Get a receipt) Write out a cost plan of how you will pay them back $100 each 2 weeks as an get mutually. with slightly of success your earnestness will keep them from putting it in collections, or taking you to courtroom. good success.

2016-12-06 00:33:23 · answer #5 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

depends on the conditions. You may be lible for all the rents until your lease is ended

2006-08-30 14:52:41 · answer #6 · answered by judy_r8 6 · 0 0

If you give two or three(not sure which) months written notice you will forfeit your security deposit but no other claims can be made against you. It's the law.

You're off the hook.

I had to do it once when I got married.

2006-08-30 15:03:45 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

liable for rent until end of lease, or until the apt. is re-rented, whichever comes first.

2006-08-30 15:00:28 · answer #8 · answered by kathleen f 2 · 0 0

U get Evited

2006-08-30 14:50:04 · answer #9 · answered by sugarbdp1 6 · 0 0

you get to pay the penalty loose the deposit and it shows up on your credit reports

2006-08-30 14:52:41 · answer #10 · answered by prasad g 3 · 0 0

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